Ted Cruz, the Republican candidate for the US Senate from Texas, presents himself as a champion of personal liberty, but he is far from that. Based on what he writes on his own campaign website, Cruz is a proponent of restricting liberty in vast areas of our lives.

Cruz opposes the right of women to make their own medical decisions in consultation with their physicians. Like many other right-wingers, Cruz does not believe a woman should have control over her reproductive processes. He believes that the government knows best what a woman should do about unwanted pregnancies. To Cruz, a woman’s reproductive system is mainly the purview of the state. Apparently, this extends even to the decision to use birth control.

Cruz’s views on religious liberty revolve entirely around the right of the government to promote religious practices associated with Abrahamic monotheism, though his views on Islam, one of the Abrahamic religions (along with Christianity and Judaism) are not clear. But he does support the government’s promotion of the Abrahamic God to the exclusion of the religious beliefs of more than 65 million Americans, and about 5.5 million Texans. It is politically convenient to side with the majority on religious issues, even if that means that the majority’s religious beliefs are, with the help of the government, crammed down the throats of those who believe differently.

Cruz does not seem to see the nexus between the need for access to health care and liberty, but without health care the liberty one has is severely circumscribed. Not only does Cruz oppose access to health care for all, he opposes George W. Bush’s prescription drug benefit for seniors. I admit that I have a vested interest in the drug benefit, since I receive Medicare benefits, including those for prescription drugs. Cruz would take from me the financial security that Medicare and all of its benefits provide. Without Medicare, my life would be more limited and its length undoubtedly shortened. The evidence shows that many, if not most, seniors are in the same situation I am in.

When Ted Cruz discusses voting, he apparently does not connect it to liberty. Instead, Cruz believes that voter fraud is a serious problem, though he is unable to find evidence for any significant voter fraud – just like everyone else who has studied the data. That hasn’t stopped him from supporting laws and regulations that make it difficult for seniors and low-income citizens to vote. No one who claims to believe in democracy can justify regulations that suppress voting, but Cruz is in favor of taking away from thousands of Texans this seminal freedom, without which we will have little, if any, liberty. The voter suppression Cruz favors most seems to be voter ID laws that require a state-issued ID to register and vote. In Texas, 34 counties do not have a state office that issues photo IDs. Four of these counties have Hispanic populations over 75%. Cruz has not protected the liberty interests of these citizens.

In a 2007 report on voter fraud, the Brennan Center concluded: “The type of individual voter fraud supposedly targeted by recent legislative efforts – especially efforts to require certain forms of voter ID – simply does not exist.” For five years during the George W. Bush presidency, the Justice Department conducted a “war on voter fraud,” which resulted in 86 convictions out of more than 196,000,000 votes cast. This result was not unexpected. It is absurd to believe that there is a systematic effort by large numbers of people to cast a vote as another person. Such projects would be an enormous waste of time, yield few results, be easy to detect, and are adequately controlled by existing criminal laws with harsh penalties. But Ted Cruz cares so little about the liberty of all Texas citizens that he wants to keep them from voting with such voter suppression laws and regulations.

Cruz’s campaign website claims that he has played an important “role in the fight against infringement of private property rights,” including those arising from the use of eminent domain by government or allowed by government. But where has Cruz been in the fight against the abuse of eminent domain allowed by Texas law for such companies as TransCanada, which is trying to take the land of Texas citizens to build a pipeline to transport tar sands oil to be refined at two Texas refineries and sold overseas to increase their profits. This pipeline will not lower any Texan’s gasoline bill or provide any long-term jobs that will benefit Texans, but Cruz has not stood up for the liberty interests of Texas landowners to protect and preserve their land.

For Cruz and many right-wingers, same sex marriage is not seen as a matter of personal liberty. Cruz thinks he and the government have the right to tell citizens whom they can love and marry. In fact, he is proud to deny citizens the right to choose the mate of their choice unless that mate is someone of the opposite sex. No liberty interest is more personal than the right to choose with whom to live, love, and marry, yet Cruz places his personal religious beliefs and preferences over the liberty interests of the entire gay population. To deny anyone such a basic liberty grounded in religious belief means that other liberties can be denied also for religious reasons. Cruz’s position is antithetical to the Constitution and basic morality – and personal liberty.

Like many right-wingers, Cruz has a limited understanding of our First amendment rights. To his credit, Cruz opposes “groups that spout hatred and bigotry,” but to Cruz this means that such groups cannot participate in civic projects of benefit to all. While I have opposed the Ku Klux Klan longer than Cruz has been alive, it violates the constitutional rights of association and free speech to deny that backward group the right to pick up litter along the highways as part of a government-sponsored program, which is an action that Cruz is proud to have pursued.

Cruz may think he supports the liberty interests of all of our citizens, but he is mistaken. He is an extreme right-wing ideologue, selected by the Republican Party of Texas, mainly through the efforts of Tea Party zealots and their rich friends, to go to Washington to destroy the social safety net that protects all our citizens from lives of misery and poverty. He has spent his brief career in the service of corporations and the wealthiest 1% of Americans – the plutocracy that is very near to complete control of our political and economic systems.

Texans have risen up in the past to oppose injustice and fight for liberty. Electing politicians like Ted Cruz is a step in the wrong direction. It is the direction that will ensure that we will all have less liberty and more government control over our lives.

8 thoughts on “Freethought San Marcos: Ted Cruz a foe of personal liberty”

No, seriously, you have succinctly and elegantly summarized progressive arguments against the extremities committed by conservatives in the name of “liberty”. I applaud that and plan to adopt some of your reasoning into my own political dialogue. Thanks

Nothing more ‘In Tune’ with America in 2012 than 3 brilliant attorney’s telling us ‘commoners’ how much interest they have in ‘our’ well-being: Lamar Hankins, Paul Sadler and Ted Cruz. Oh yea, we’ll sure miss exiting attorney, Kay Bailey Hutchison, and her recommendations while on the subcommitee on Veterans’ Affairs, to cut funds for mental health & PTSD care to veterans that served honorably waiting for IED’S to kill them or dismember them in middle-east ghetto’s and along roadways. Surely,we can trust that each lawyer mentioned here has no self-promoting agenda, but instead hold a sincere yearning to see that main-stream Texans and Americans-All, most of whom are slugging through a devastating recession, unemployment and $5.00 a gallon gasoline, are their first priority. Surely?

Hey Mr. Cameron, you don’t need to pay five bucks for gas. HEB has a promotion for 12 cents off of gas if u use one of their gift cards. I am paying like three thrity a gallon. Hope that helps you out a little.

Thanks for using an actual name in your response to my column. However, I am at a loss to understand what you think my “self-promoting agenda” might be. I just write about social and political issues. My only interest is to have my thoughts and ideas read by as many people as possible so that we can have a rational discussion about the issues raised. I am not a politician, as are Cruz or Hutchison. The fact that I have a law degree is irrelevant to Cruz’s limited understanding of personal liberty. I would like to promote more personal liberty for everyone, not just for myself. I’m perplexed about why you see this as a “self-promoting agenda.”

Not that I am here to support Ted Cruz, he has many flaws. Some that him and Sadler share are their statements that neither would cut $1 from military spending. Both are hard on the war on drugs, and neither seems to understand foreign policy at all.

That being said, it doesn’t take a rocket scientist to understand that “personal liberty” is not taking from someone and giving it to someone else. That could never be construed as “personal liberty”, most often that is considered stealing.

As the Libertarian candidate for United States Senate I have no problems with a women managing her own body, but do not ask me to pay for it. And more importantly do not ask me to believe that somehow the Federal government is the best place for these types of decisions to be dictated.

Anyway, we share a revulsion to Ted Cruz, my revulsion stems from the fact that he is literally in bed with Goldman Sachs. And I find it hard to believe someone who claims to be a fiscal conservative is not going to fold like a burrito when the time comes to make the big decisions.

Have a good day, but you honestly should stop saying you believe in liberty, you don’t seem to have any better understanding of the word than Cruz.

“See if the law takes from some persons what belongs to them, and gives it to other persons to whom it does not belong. See if the law benefits one citizen at the expense of another by doing what the citizen himself cannot do without committing a crime. Then abolish this law without delay, for it is not only an evil itself, but also it is a fertile source for further evils because it invites reprisals.” – Frédéric Bastiat